Larsen & Toubro Limited vs. UOI (Bombay High Court)
CBEC
Circular that demand should be recovered even if stay application is
not disposed of for no fault of assessee is arbitrary, unjustified &
unlawful
The Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC) issued Circular No. 967/01/ 2013 – CX dated 01.01.2013 to
deal with recovery of demand. The Circular provided that (i) even if a
stay application is pending, steps for recovery must be initiated thirty
days after the filing of the appeal if no stay is granted, (ii) if the
Commissioner (Appeals) has confirmed a demand, recovery has to be
initiated immediately despite s. 35F permitting the
assessee to move the
Tribunal for a dispensation of the requirement of deposit and (iii) if
the Tribunal has confirmed the demand, recovery should be initiated
immediately despite the statute
providing a time period for filing an appeal to the High Court. The
Circular was challenged by the assessees on the ground that recovery of
the demand even when the assessee is not responsible for the delay in
disposal of the stay application/ appeal and during the pendency of the
time period for filing an appeal was arbitrary and violative of Article
14 of the Constitution. HELD by the High Court upholding the plea:
(i) Though in Krishna Sales (73)
ELT 519 (SC) it was held that the mere filing of an appeal does not
operate as a stay or suspension of the order appealed against, where the
delay in the disposal of an appeal or a stay application arises due to a
failure of the Appellate Authority to dispose of the appeal or the stay
application and the assessee is not at fault, there is no reason or
justification to penalize the assessee by recovering the demand in the
meantime. Administrative reasons for non-disposal of the stay
application may include lack of adequate infrastructure, unavailability
of the officer concerned before whom the stay application has been
filed, absence of a Bench before the CESTAT for the decision of an
application for stay or the sheer volume of work. In such a situation,
where an assessee
has done everything within his control by moving an application for
stay and which remains pending because of the inability of the
Commissioner (Appeals) or the CESTAT to dispose of the application
within thirty days, it would be a travesty of justice if recovery
proceedings are allowed to be initiated in the meantime. The protection
of the revenue has to be necessarily balanced with fairness to the
assessee. That was why, even though a specific statutory provision came
to be introduced by Parliament in s. 35C(2A) to the effect that an order
of stay would stand vacated where the appeal before the Tribunal was
not disposed of within 180 days, the Supreme Court held inKumar Cotton Mills 180
ELT 434 (SC) that this would not apply to a situation where the appeal
had remained pending for reasons not attributable to the assessee.
(ii)
Also initiation of recovery proceedings without allowing the assessee,
the time which is allowed by the statute for filing an appeal and for
applying for a waiver of pre-deposit or for filing an appeal to the High
Court is not justified. The circular is in terrorem and its plain
effect and consequence is to deprive the assessee of the remedy which is
provided under the law of moving, as the case may be, the CESTAT, the
High Court or the Supreme Court against an order of adjudication of the
competent appellate forum. There is no justification to commence
recovery immediately following an order in appeal where the limitation
period for challenging the decision of the Appellate Authority has not
expired. The Circular is to that extent patently arbitrary and violative
of Article 14 of the Constitution. The Department’s
argument that the field officers who initiate recovery action have no
means of verifying the status of the stay application is not justified.
The Ministry of Finance should take steps to ensure that proceedings
before all the authorities are recorded in the electronic form. This
will provide transparency and accountability in the functioning of all
authorities. However, if the failure to dispose of the stay application
is because of the conduct of the assessee, the revenue would be
justified in commencing recovery action.
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